No.
In order to upgrade SDRAM with DDR, you will need to replace your motherboard. DDR uses a different slot than SDRAM, so if your motherboard is using SDRAM currently, you will most likely have to replace your motherboard in order to make your system support DDR.
There are plenty of places in order for one to purchase a 184 pin SDRAM. However, one might want to order from the website Amazon to have better prices.
There are a lot of places in order for one to find more information about PC133 SDRAM. However, it is strongly suggested that one should check out from the website Amazon.
that is the main circuit board inside a computer. Every other component is connected to the motherboard in order to work.
no
Master and Slave configuration is necessary for motherboard in order to choose right disk to boot from.
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SD Ram is actually SDR SDRAM, and DD Ram is actually DDR SDRAM, though the former does not usually have the SDR in front of it. The letters SDR and DDR stand for Single Data Rate and Double Data Rate, and the letters SDRAM stand for Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory. The main difference between SDR and DDR memory is speed. There are a lot of little differences, but the main one (IMHO) that affects the user is speed: DDR can transfer data at roughly twice the speed of SDR. More speedy data rates = better performance. Just remember, the motherboard you are using must include the appropriate chipset to support the different RAM types. They are not interchangeable. SDR SDRAM comes in three main flavors: PC66, PC100 and PC133. Each successive number refers to the bus speed of the RAM in MHz, thus PC66 runs at 66 MHz, PC100 runs at 100 MHz, etc. SDR SDRAM has 168 pins at the connector. DDR SDRAM has 184 pins at the connector, which is one reason you can't just use DDR instead of SDR, and comes in many different flavors; PC2100 which runs at 266 MHz, PC2700 which runs at 333 MHz, PC3200 which runs at 400 MHz, etc. While the numbers on SDR SDRAM referred to clock speeds, the DDR SDRAM numbers come from the theoretical maximum bandwidth in Megabytes per second (MB/s). Thus, PC2100 has a theoretical maximum bandwidth of 2100 MB/s, but runs at 133 MHz. DDR SDRAM modules are now available from PC1600 all the way up to PC4400, which has a bandwidth of 4400 MB/s and runs at 550 MHz. In order to know which type of RAM you need, you must know what your motherboard supports. I recommend searching the motherboard manufacturer's website for this info, or review sites like tomshardware.com or sharkyextreme.com. Good luck!
i presume the processor already attached on the motherboard with it's cooler on. Order: motherboard-ram-hdd-cd/dvd drive-pci/pcie/agp cards-power supply.
Yes, in order for a computer to work at all. A motherboard holds all the hardwares; e.g. CPU, video card, sound card, etc.. which is why it is called the "mother" board
22
1 GB. Note that there is no such thing as dual channel memory, although computer stores may sell it as that. The dual channel feature is a function of the memory controller. You need two matching memory modules in order for dual channel to work.